International Maintenance Conference: The Speed of Reliability

International Maintenance Conference 2025: The Speed of Reliability

Sign Up

Please use your business email address if applicable

leadership for reliability

Does Your Company Need a Maintenance Culture Intervention?

Let’s face it, most companies need a culture intervention – something like a 12-step program. This article will explore behavioral issues that are often at the core of a culture of neglect and mediocracy. It borrows much from management science, leadership principles and conversations with individuals working in the field of maintenance reliability.

A Journey to Shape Reliability Excellence at Bristol-Myers Squibb - Part 3

A Journey to Shape Reliability Excellence at Bristol-Myers Squibb - Part 3

This installment shows how the Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (BMS) aligned its central efforts with the reliability strategy. It continues the journey from Part 1 in Uptime’s December/January 2016 issue describing the initial implementation of Uptime Elements at BMS and Part 2 in Uptime’s February/March 2016 issue demonstrating how the sites began to adopt and utilize Uptime Elements as a communication tool to set strategy and align reliability efforts with their specific site goals. This seemingly hands-off approach helped to create an organic culture with a sense of ownership for the sites while still maintaining a consistent approach globally.

The Eight Elements of Change and the Four Elements of Culture

Change fails mainly for one reason. That reason is that those who initiate the change initiatives work and think only at what I will call the “hard skill” level.

Hard skills are those tasks we


Leaders - Enabling Progress

Leadership is described by what you do not what you say. Leaders understand differences - different challenges, different people, and different needs - manage accordingly. Do you struggle with

...

banner
A weekly collection of recommended articles and videos to boost your reliability journey. Right in your inbox
DOWNLOAD NOW
Starting Your Campaign: Selling Maintenance as a Profit Center

Starting Your Campaign: Selling Maintenance as a Profit Center

IMC-2015 RAP Talk - 19:13
by Joe Anderson

Starting Your Campaign: Selling Maintenance as a Profit Center by Joe Anderson, The J.M. Smucker CompanyProactive maintenance can be a tough sell. Why invest in expensive updates or costly down time to work on machines that are functioning well enough? While most maintenance managers understand the value of proactive maintenance, making it happen may require an effective sales pitch to upper management. This presentation will help propel the careers of those in maintenance by explaining how to present your maintenance department as a profit generator,not a necessary evil. Attendees will learn how to start this type of campaign as well as the business side of maintenance management, including why competitive advantage is important,the three value types, and the different methods of tracking cost savings and avoidances.

How to Get Sites to Create a “Pull” Reliability Strategy

How to Get Sites to Create a “Pull” Reliability Strategy

IMC-2015 RAP Talk - 12:39
by George Williams, Associate Director of Asset Management, Bristol-Myers Squibb

A Pull System is when a company has a set of tools at its center, and a team that wants to pull those tools for their current needs. But is that truly empowering your team? In this lively presentation, George Williams explores the concept of a “Pull” reliability strategy. To expand on his point, Williams touches on leadership, religion, causes, and revolution.

Uptime Award Winners 2015

Uptime Award Winners 2015

Recognizing the Best of the Best!

Uptime Magazine congratulates the following outstanding programs for their commitment to and execution of high quality Predictive Maintenance and Condition Monitoring Programs.

To read more about each company, download the Uptime Award Winners’ stories at: uptimeawards.com.

Discover Defect Elimination Through Effective Reliability Leadership

Discover Defect Elimination Through Effective Reliability Leadership

Focused Forum from IMC-2015 - 28:47
by Jeff Shiver, People & Processes

Thinking back over your career, you have probably lived through (and survived) many initiatives that ultimately required some level of culture transformation. Surely you recognize the tools; reliability centered maintenance, root cause analysis, total production manufacturing, lean, six sigma and theory of constraints, and so on. Often times, these initiatives were poorly funded and resourced. Add to that the competing objectives with cost cutting and downsizing, not to mention multiple objectives at the same time. It’s not unlike management throwing spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks. Reality is that most doesn’t. So it’s not surprising that 70-75% of initiatives fail to yield the anticipated results. I’ve been there and done that too.

If we consider our goals, they are somewhat straightforward. Engage the people, meet the customer requirements, and generate profits for the business. To do that, we need reliability in all things; the people, the equipment, and the processes. But reliability does not come from fixing things faster or planning the work as examples. The reliability we seek comes from defect elimination in all those things; the people, equipment, and processes. If we consider these defects, the majority are random and driven by behaviors. Behaviors translate to culture. Culture beats strategy hands down. The challenge becomes not changing but transforming the culture, transforming the behaviors. People buy-in to change when they help create it. So, rather than a top down “thou shalt” strategy, we have to provide a compass for change. Creating that compass and engagement requires leadership, Reliability Leadership.

Do You Fit the Bill? 8 Crucial Skills Maintenance Managers Must Have

As a maintenance reliability professional, you have technical training of some kind, basic knowledge of asset management principles, technical knowledge of the equipment you manage and practical experience from years working in the field. These are the hard skills needed to perform your job. However, technical education, training and knowledge will not give you the skills you need to effectively manage a team of maintenance professionals. Along with hard skills, you need a very particular set of soft skills to excel in your role. These skills will lead to greater productivity and efficiency across the maintenance team. More importantly, they will lead to less stress, greater job satisfaction and ongoing career achievement for you. These soft skills are:

Lessons Learned from Mt. Stupid

Lessons Learned from Mt. Stupid

IMC-2015 RAP Talk - 19:50
by Joseph Paris, Founder of the Operational Excellence Society

Each of us belongs to a community, or network. The individual members of a network have a shared commitment and affinity to the kernel. As such, they will behave in a predictable manner since there is nothing to gain by any individual changing their position unilaterally. In reality, to disturb the predictability never even crosses the mind of the members.

Applying Game Theory and the Nash Equilibrium, this session will investigate the circumstances under which change takes place – and when it does not. We will discuss the creation of an effective disruptor and how it can be deployed in a controlled and sustainable fashion. We will also touch on the human dynamics aspect of the Dunning-Kruger Effect which states that a person will pursue a path out of ignorance and with great confidence until it is glaringly apparent that the path is wrong, at which time their confidence deflates before the process of rebuilding can occur.

Leadership in Reliability Central Arizona Project

Leadership in Reliability Central Arizona Project

Most people are aware that the State of Arizona has grown considerably over the past few decades. In fact, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, the state’s population grew 40 percent from 1990 to 2000, second only to Nevada. Phoenix, the state’s largest city, stands today as the nation’s sixth largest city and is poised to be fifth soon. Interestingly, the five cities besting Phoenix in population all reside on great bodies of water along the East Coast, West Coast, Gulf Coast and Great Lakes, each with a river, port and shipping fleet. Contrast that to the metropolitan area of Phoenix with 4.4 million people living in a desert community with an annual average rainfall of less than eight inches. Ever wonder how that is even possible?

PDCA Cycle

The power of PDCA is its simplicity and cumulative improvement possibilities by continually repeating the cycle, done either by the same team or other teams.

PLAN: Start with the expected results in mind. Establish the objectives and processes required to attain the expected results.

DO: Implement the new process. Start small at first to test the new idea.

CHECK: Measure the new process relative to the expected results.

ACT: Analyze the differences and root causes by comparing current best practice versus new ideas to understand specific opportunities. Each cause should be the beginning of another PDCA, resulting in further improvement.

Tip from  The Relativity by Dr. Klaus Blache

A Journey to Shape Reliability Excellence at BMS - Part 2

A Journey to Shape Reliability Excellence at BMS - Part 2

Part 1, published in Uptime Magazine’s December/January 2016 issue, discussed the initial implementation of Uptime Elements at Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (BMS), including an exercise in which our sites prioritized the elements to determine our path going forward as a company. As we wrapped up our exercise, the sites were challenged with taking this framework back to perform similar exercises and integrate the framework into their local strategies. Part 2 demonstrates how the adoption of a common framework translates at the site level and how the unique use of this framework begins to drive the culture at BMS.

Coach and Mentor Maintenance Planners for Improved Success

Often, organizations send their Maintenance Planner Schedulers for education on concepts and techniques in both Planning and Scheduling only to have the Planner Schedulers return and fail. So

...

Mapping the Uptime Elements to Your Asset Performance Management Process

Mapping the Uptime Elements to Your Asset Performance Management Process

Focused Forum from IMC-2015 - 37:43 
by Sandra DiMatteo, Bentley Systems

Adhering to and sustaining an asset performance management process doesn’t come easy. That’s why we need a holistic system-based approach like the Uptime Elements with its evolving technical, cultural and leadership elements. This interactive session demonstrates the key to making the elements ‘stick’ – diligence to a proactive business process. Is your process proactive? Explore how to map your business process and tasks to the Uptime Elements, building on what you are already doing successfully and identifying areas for improvement. You will identify the need to improve in one Uptime Element or another; from reliability engineering for maintenance, asset condition management, work execution or perhaps your organization needs new leadership skills for reliability. But overall, the biggest bang for your buck is learning how to ensure people are focused on the process, understand their role and responsibilities and are supported with the proper training and software to drive and support the process. 

February 2016 Maximo Manufacturing User Group Meeting

February 2016 Maximo Manufacturing User Group Meeting

Original release date: 2-18-16
Organizer: Jason Verly

  • Call for presenters
  • Making the most of IBM InterConnect 2016
  • Overview of upcoming events
How Smart Connected Assets Will Impact Your Uptime Elements

How Smart Connected Assets Will Impact Your Uptime Elements

Whether you call it the Internet of Things (IoT) or the Industrial Internet of Things (IIoT), the simple fact is everyone is talking about the technological shift taking place today that is creating previously unimagined connectivity between myriad of devices. Many say IIoT isn’t actually new, as sensors have talked to controllers and other systems for decades and maintenance technicians have used tablets for at least 15 years. However, there is a different viewpoint, which this article explores.

Reliability Leadership

World-class organizations recognize that success is achieved through leadership, however, they also realize that results are only delivered through engagement and empowerment of everyone in the

Solutions 2.0 Virtual Conference - Session 3

Solutions 2.0 Virtual Conference - Session 3

RAP Talk - Leading Leaders 
by George Williams - Director, Asset Management, B. Braun Medical

To be a leader of leaders one must never strive to be “the” leader but rather foster the growth of others until they, and only they, determine
you are. Leading leaders will explore the concepts of reliability sustainability with a focus on people and culture.

Leading Management Into Lubrication Best Practices by Jarrod Potteiger, Manager, Educational Services - Des-Case Corporation

For years manufacturers neglected precision lubrication in their pursuit of reliability, but things are changing. More and more maintenance professionals are discovering the importance of precision lubrication and gaining the knowledge to execute it. However, knowing what to do and getting approval to do it are two different things. One of the most common impediments is a lack of support from management and operations. This presentation walks you through the steps to create a rock solid case for getting management buy-in.

Uptime Elements & Global Sustainability Programs

Uptime Elements & Global Sustainability Programs

Focused Forum from IMC-2015 - 33:10
by Nikolaus Despain & Laura Lamb, Leprino Foods

In this presentation, learn by shared examples and tools in Uptime Elements Cp, Mt, Pm & Hcm used
by a large food manufacturer that resulted in improved results for their Global Sustainability Program.


Areas to be covered:
Cp – Examples (with ROI) of capital projects focusing on energy management.
Mt – How using an All-Test Pro unit to identify high energy consuming motors changes replacement
decisions.
Pm – Examples on how to leverage PM programs to manage infrequent (but seasonally necessary) building & equipment adjustments for low cost/no cost energy savings.
Hcm – Examples and tools used to leverage the entire company work force to generate ideas for onsite
Resource Conservation teams, resulting in significant low cost/no cost resource conservation ideas

ChatGPT with
ReliabilityWeb:
Find Your Answers Fast
Start